Christina Jones is an employee of Commonwealth Edison (“ComEd”), which is the major electricity provider in the Chicago area. One day, while working in her job as a meter reader in Braidwood, Illinois, she was stopped and then arrested by Officers Craig Clark and Donn Kaminski. The officers were responding to a report that a “person of color” was taking pictures of houses in Braidwood. (Jones is an African-American, and Braidwood is almost entirely white. According to the U.S. Census Bureau, Braidwood’s population in 2000 was over 97% white. See http://www.census.gov.) Jones sued the officers, alleging among things that the stop and arrest violated her Fourth Amendment rights. The defendant officers took the position that no constitutional violation had occurred because they reasonably suspected that Jones was involved in criminal activity at the time of the stop and they had probable cause to arrest her. The parties outlined their positions in cross-motions for summary judgment, and Officers Clark and Kaminski added that they were entitled to qualified immunity from suit, which allows public officials to avoid trial “ ‘insofar as their conduct does not violate clearly established statutory or constitutional rights of which a reasonable person would have known.’ ”
Mitchell v. Forsyth,
I
We begin, as we must, with our jurisdiction to consider this appeal. Appellate jurisdiction is limited to “final decisions of the district courts.” 28 U.S.C. § 1291. Generally, a lower court’s order cannot be reviewed until all claims of all parties have been resolved.
Johnson v. Jones,
Mitchell v. Forsyth,
This conundrum led the Court in
Mitchell
to underscore that a qualified-immunity appeal must focus exclusively on legal questions about immunity, rather than factual disputes tied up with the merits of the case.
The official’s right to immunity turns on two questions: first, whether the facts presented, taken in the light most favorable to the plaintiff, describe a violation of a constitutional right, and second, whether the federal right at issue was clearly established at the time that the alleged violation occurred.
Pearson v. Callahan,
Behrens
clarified that a district court’s assertion that factual disputes preclude a defendant’s claim of immunity does not itself deprive the court of appeals of jurisdiction.
In a collateral-order appeal like this one, where the defendants say that they accept the plaintiffs version of the facts, we will take them at their word and consider their legal arguments in that light. If, however, we detect a back-door effort to contest the facts, we will reject it and dismiss the appeal for want of jurisdiction. By the same token, an appeal from a denial of qualified immunity cannot be used as an early way to test the sufficiency of the evidence to reach the trier of fact. In such a case, where there really is no legal question, we will dismiss the appeal for lack of jurisdiction. See
Viilo,
Here, as we have already noted, the district court decided that factual disputes prevented resolution of the officers’ qualified immunity claim. It said, “[A] factual
*681
dispute exists as to whether defendants Officers Clark and Kaminski had probable cause to arrest plaintiff,” and it added that “the disputed facts include ... whether Officer Clark had reasonable suspicion to stop Jones.”
Jones v. Clark,
II
August 16, 2005, promised to be a busy day for Jones. She had 500 electrical meters to read for ComEd before the end of her shift, and by 8 a.m. she was hard at work in Braidwood. Like many ComEd meter readers, Jones carried a pair of binoculars with her so that she could take readings from a distance, in the event that a gate was locked or a dog was left guarding a yard. A concerned citizen saw Jones using her binoculars, confused her for a construction worker photographing houses along the street, and called the Braidwood Police.
Officers Clark and Kaminski, who were patrolling separately, responded. Officer Clark drove straight to the scene, where he found Jones walking across the street, dressed in a hat, shirt, pants, and a reflective vest, all emblazoned with ComEd’s logo. From his car, Officer Clark asked Jones whether she was reading meters, and she said that she was. Within three minutes of responding to the 911 call, Officer Clark radioed Officer Kaminski and his dispatcher to explain that Jones was a ComEd worker. Thirty seconds later, Officer Kaminski radioed in. He had stopped to talk with the person who had called the police, and Officer Kaminski too confirmed that Jones was reading meters.
Surprisingly, that did not end the investigation. Officer Clark asked Jones whether she would speak with him for a moment. Jones agreed to do so. Officer Clark parked his car, approached Jones, and explained that there had been a complaint. Jones gave Officer Clark two ComEd identification cards. Each displayed the ComEd logo and Jones’s photograph on the front; one gave Jones’s full name and her ComEd employee number; and the other said “FIELD IDENTIFICATION” and “Christina A.” Jones commented that her driver’s license was in her car, which was parked a few blocks away. After Officer Clark explained that a resident was concerned that someone was taking photographs of houses, Jones realized that her binoculars must have caused the confusion and she showed them to Officer Clark, explaining why she used them.
Then Jones turned to walk away. Officer Clark stopped her, asking, “What’s the rush?” Jones explained that she was in a hurry because she had a tremendous amount of work to finish before the end of the day. Officer Clark, still unsatisfied, asked Jones for her date of birth. As the defendants ultimately conceded at oral argument, during the course of this exchange Jones was not free to leave. Jones asked why Officer Clark needed the additional information and accused him of harassing her. Then she took a few steps *682 away from Officer Clark, took out her cell phone, and dialed her supervisor. Officer Clark radioed to Officer Kaminski that Jones was refusing to cooperate.
Moments later, Officer Kaminski arrived and saw Jones standing with her phone to her ear, three feet away from Officer Clark. Officer Kaminski was irate. He screamed at Jones as he approached and demanded to know whether she had given Officer Clark the information he needed. Jones said that she had, and Officer Kaminski responded, “No, you didn’t. Do you want to go to jail?” Jones naturally said no, but it was too late. Officer Kaminski knocked Jones’s cell phone from her hand, pulled her arms behind her back, put her in handcuffs, and then threw her against Officer Clark’s police car. As Officer Kaminski patted Jones down, Jones said, “[T]his is harassment.... [T]his is happening because I am black in Braidwood.”
Officers Clark and Kaminski took Jones to the police station for booking. Officer Kaminski continued to act abusively toward Jones once they arrived there. At one point, he mocked Jones’s actions and things she had said, mimicking her voice and adding, “[Y]ou wanted to make it racial out there---- [N]ow it’s racial.” Jones was charged with obstructing a peace officer. She was released on bond that day. The charge had been pending for more than two years when it was terminated with a directed verdict for Jones.
Ill
As we mentioned, Officers Clark and Kaminski are entitled to immunity if then-conduct did not violate clearly established constitutional rights of which a reasonable person would have known.
Harlow,
A
Officer Clark did not violate the Constitution by asking Jones what she was doing. So long as communication between an officer and a citizen remains consensual, the Fourth Amendment is not implicated.
Florida v. Bostick,
The fatal flaw in Officers Clark and Kaminski’s argument is that they cannot point to a single circumstance that could have led them to believe that Jones was engaged in criminal activity. See
Brown v. Texas,
Nor does any federal or state law justify the stop or support the view that Jones was committing a crime. It is not a crime to take pictures on the street, and it is not an offense for a ComEd worker to read electrical meters using binoculars. This case therefore bears no resemblance to one in which an officer responds to a call about a domestic dispute and detains a person matching the description of the perpetrator. See
Hardrick v. City of Bolingbrook,
The defendants invoke the Illinois “stop and identify” statute, 725 ILCS 5/107-14, and the Supreme Court’s decision in
Hiibel,
B
Jones also complains that her arrest violated the Fourth Amendment. Here, the officers are entitled to qualified immunity only if they had probable cause to arrest her or if a reasonable officer in their position could mistakenly have believed that probable cause existed.
Humphrey v. Staszak,
Officers Clark and Kaminski’s argument that they had probable cause to arrest Jones for disorderly conduct is so underdeveloped that it could be considered waived or at least forfeited. See
Spath v. Hayes Wheels Int’l-Ind. Inc.,
The officers’ argument that they had probable cause to arrest Jones for obstructing a peace officer deserves more attention, but it fails as well. A person is guilty of obstructing a peace officer when she “knowingly resists or obstructs the performance by one known to the person to be a peace officer ... of any authorized act within his official capacity....” 720 ILCS 5/31-l(a). As we noted, after
Hiibel
an officer may arrest a person for obstructing a peace officer if that person fails to comply with the Illinois stop and arrest statute, but only if the initial stop was justified by reasonable suspicion of criminal activity. We have already explained why Officers Clark and Kaminski had no reason to be suspicious of Jones, and so the Illinois stop and identify statute cannot be the source of arguable probable cause for Jones’s arrest. Moreover, our past cases show why actions like Jones’s do not supply probable cause to arrest a suspect for obstructing a peace officer. See
Williams v. Jaglowski,
The defendants do not point to any physical act [the plaintiff] committed that would satisfy the requirement set out in Raby. Moreover ... [the plaintiff] did not engage in any physical act that in any way hindered or impeded [the police]. Her only offense was ... to refuse to supply ... her date of birth, which would not constitute obstruction as the Illinois Supreme Court defined that offense in Raby.
IV
The doctrine of qualified immunity draws a balance between the desire to compensate those who have been injured by official misconduct and the need to protect public officials who are exercising discretion in their day-to-day jobs.
Harlow,
